Analysis
KSE-100 Surges 7,500 Points as Iran War De-escalation Hopes Grip Pakistan’s Markets
As foreign central banks dump $90 billion in US Treasuries and Brent crude convulses near $120, Islamabad’s unlikely role as peacebroker is paying an unexpected dividend on the trading floor.
There is a peculiar kind of optimism that only emerges in the eye of a hurricane. Wednesday morning at the Pakistan Stock Exchange felt exactly like that. At 12:05 p.m., the benchmark KSE-100 Index stood at 156,204.89 — having gained 7,461.58 points, or 5.02%, from the previous close — a move so violent that it triggered a mandatory market halt, suspending all equity-based trading under PSX circuit-breaker rules. ProPakistani The previous session had already closed higher. Tuesday’s KSE-100 session had ended at 148,743.32, up 1,900.34 points, as investors began pricing in whispers of a ceasefire from Washington. Profit by Pakistan Today By Wednesday noon, those whispers had become a roar.
This is not, however, a story only about Karachi. It is a story about a world economy convulsing under the weight of a war in the Persian Gulf, a $30 trillion US Treasury market being quietly liquidated by desperate central banks, and — most improbably — Pakistan sitting at the centre of the most consequential diplomatic negotiation of 2026. The KSE-100’s surge is at once a relief rally, a geopolitical signal, and a referendum on how tightly Pakistan’s financial fate is now knotted to its new role as peacebroker between Washington and Tehran.
Why Karachi Erupted: The Anatomy of a 5% Day
Buying momentum on Wednesday was broad-based, with strong activity across automobile assemblers, cement, commercial banks, fertiliser, oil and gas exploration, oil marketing companies, and power generation firms. Major index-heavyweights — HBL, MCB, MEBL, UBL, MARI, OGDC, PPL, POL, PSO, HUBCO, and ARL — all traded firmly in the green, reflecting renewed investor confidence amid easing geopolitical risk. ProPakistani
The rally follows emerging hopes of de-escalation in the Iran war after US President Donald Trump and Secretary of State Marco Rubio signalled that the conflict could end soon, with Washington indicating potential direct talks with Tehran’s leadership and a winding down of hostilities even without a formal deal. Profit by Pakistan Today Trump, speaking from the White House on Tuesday, said the US exit could come “within two weeks, maybe two or three.”
The market context matters enormously here. The rebound follows a brutal first-quarter correction, during which the Pakistan Stock Exchange benchmark declined around 15% amid geopolitical uncertainty and relentless selling pressure. Profit by Pakistan Today That selloff was not irrational. Pakistan’s economy is structurally exposed to Middle East energy prices — the country imports the overwhelming majority of its oil and LNG, and any sustained spike in Brent crude flows directly into inflation, the current account deficit, and State Bank of Pakistan reserves. When the war began on February 28, the PSX reacted the way a patient loses colour when told bad news: quickly, and all at once.
Wednesday’s reversal tells a different story. It tells you that the market had been pricing in far worse than what may now materialise. It tells you that institutional and retail buyers in Karachi, Lahore, and Islamabad are not just trading geopolitics abstractly — they are trading Pakistan’s specific role in ending this crisis.
The $90 Billion Treasury Liquidation: A Slow-Motion Earthquake Under Bond Markets
While traders in Karachi were celebrating, bond desks in New York, London, and Tokyo were navigating something far more structurally significant. New York Fed custody data shows that since the week before the conflict broke out — the week of February 25 — foreign monetary authorities have been net sellers of US Treasuries for five consecutive weeks, with the total sell-off exceeding $90 billion, and holdings falling to the lowest level since 2012. All-Weather Media
The Financial Times, citing Federal Reserve data, confirmed that the value of Treasuries held in custody at the New York Fed by official institutions — a group largely made up of central banks but also including governments and international institutions — has dropped by $82 billion since February 25 to $2.7 trillion. X
The mechanics driving this sell-off are not mysterious, even if their consequences are underappreciated. The direct cause of this round of selling is the urgent need for dollar liquidity among countries — from foreign exchange market intervention to paying energy import bills and financing defense spending, the surge in demand for dollars is forcing foreign central banks to liquidate their most liquid dollar assets: US Treasuries. Futu News
The single most striking data point in the disaggregated country-level picture is Turkey’s. Official figures show that since February 27 — the day before the US attacked Iran — Turkey’s central bank sold about $22 billion in foreign government bonds from its reserves, mainly US Treasuries. Turkey also sold or swapped about 58 tons of gold valued at over $8 billion. All-Weather Media
Brad Setser, Senior Fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and arguably the world’s foremost tracker of sovereign reserve flows, has been clear about who else is in the queue. Setser stated that “many countries are unwilling to let their currencies depreciate further, as this would drive up oil prices denominated in local currencies — either implying more fiscal subsidies or increasing the burden on people’s daily lives. Therefore, many countries have generally decided to intervene in the foreign exchange market to try to limit the depreciation of their currencies.” Futu News India and Thailand, both large oil importers, have also seen foreign reserve drawdowns since the war began, though it remains unclear whether those represent outright Treasury sales or dollar deposit liquidations.
Bank of America US rates strategist Meghan Swiber has been unambiguous: the foreign official sector is selling US Treasuries, and the selling “confirms a more macro narrative — that foreign reserve managers and official accounts are diversifying away from US Treasuries.” All-Weather Media
The structural backdrop is equally sobering. A recent Morgan Stanley report shows the proportion of US Treasuries held by foreign investors has dropped to its lowest since 1997, with the share of coupon-bearing Treasuries held by foreign investors falling steadily since the 2008 peak of 64.4% and now near multi-decade lows. All-Weather Media The Iran war has not created this trend — but it has violently accelerated it. As the Financial Times reported on Tuesday, the bond market’s largest and most stable category of buyer is now, in a period of maximum global stress, a net seller.
This matters for Pakistan in a roundabout but real way. Higher US Treasury yields — the mathematical consequence of this selling pressure — tighten global dollar funding conditions, increase the cost of Pakistan’s external debt servicing, and strengthen the dollar in ways that amplify imported inflation. A faster resolution to the Iran conflict is, in this sense, not just a geopolitical good but a financial one for Islamabad.
The Strait, the Shock, and the Oil Market Nobody Saw Coming
The International Energy Agency has called it the biggest oil supply shock in history. Due to Iran’s selective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, the world is losing as much as 20 million barrels of oil per day from Middle East producers. Since the war began five weeks ago, Brent crude has risen more than 50%. CNN
Brent crude was trading at just over $118 per barrel for May deliveries, while the more widely traded June delivery contract was around $103.50. The average price of gasoline in the United States crossed $4 per gallon for the first time since 2022. CBS News For emerging markets that import most of their energy, these numbers translate into something far more corrosive than headline inconvenience: they represent a structural transfer of wealth from oil-importing nations to a geopolitical standoff, mediated by a narrow chokepoint 21 miles wide at its narrowest point.
The Wall Street Journal, citing administration officials, reported that Trump and his aides had concluded that a military mission to reopen the Strait of Hormuz would extend beyond his four-to-six-week timeline, and he had decided to focus on targeting Iran’s missiles and navy before seeking to pressure Iran diplomatically to reopen it. Euronews
That shift — from military maximalism to diplomatic realism — is precisely what equity markets in Karachi, and indeed across emerging Asia, have been waiting for.
Pakistan’s Diplomatic Dividend: The Unlikely Peacebroker
The most remarkable subplot of this crisis is not the Treasury sell-off, nor the oil price spike. It is Islamabad’s transformation, over the past two weeks, from a country wracked by internal protests over the US strikes on Iran into a credible diplomatic interlocutor between Washington and Tehran.
Pakistan’s Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar confirmed that “US-Iran indirect talks are taking place through messages being relayed by Pakistan,” adding that Turkey and Egypt were also extending support to the initiative. US envoy Steve Witkoff confirmed presenting a 15-point action list as the framework for a peace deal, which mediator Pakistan gave to Iran. NPR President Trump then paused his deadline for the destruction of Iran’s energy plants by ten days to April 6, citing the ongoing talks. Special envoy Steve Witkoff confirmed at President Trump’s Cabinet meeting that the US has been negotiating with Iran through diplomatic channels with Pakistan as the conduit. CNN
Foreign Policy has described this as a role that makes more geopolitical sense than it initially appears. Pakistan is a rare country that has warm ties with both the United States and Iran and is engaged with the highest levels of both governments. Pakistan also represents Tehran’s diplomatic interests in Washington. Furthermore, Pakistan has dealt closely with the family of a key player on the US side — Middle East envoy Steve Witkoff. Foreign Policy
The domestic calculus is equally clear: Pakistan’s mediation push is driven by economic strain, security concerns, and strategic calculation. With energy markets volatile and the country reliant on Gulf oil and LNG imports, any sustained spike in global crude prices could deepen a crisis Pakistan can ill afford. Pakistan’s fragile economic recovery is under renewed stress, with constrained fiscal space and minimal strategic oil reserves. The Researchers
The PSX’s 7,500-point single-session surge is, in a narrow sense, investors pricing in the probability that Pakistan’s diplomatic gamble pays off. A ceasefire, even an imperfect one, would lower oil prices, ease imported inflation, reduce pressure on State Bank of Pakistan foreign reserves, and reopen the possibility of further monetary easing by the SBP — all of which are bullish for Pakistani equities.
Risks: The Rally Is Real, But the Ceasefire Isn’t — Yet
Markets have a well-documented habit of pricing in peace talks before those talks produce peace. The KSE-100’s gain on Wednesday is a bet, not a receipt.
Several credible risks remain. Iran has countered the US 15-point plan with its own five conditions, including recognition of Iran’s legitimate rights, payment of war reparations, and firm international guarantees against future aggression. Al Jazeera Those are not trivial demands from a country that has seen its Supreme Leader killed and its military infrastructure methodically dismantled. Ending the war with Iran retaining effective control of the Strait of Hormuz would be seen internationally as a strategic defeat for the United States — Iran would claim victory and might monetize its position by imposing tolls on transiting tankers, providing revenues to rebuild its military and nuclear programmes. CNN
Secretary of State Rubio has been clearer on the endgame than almost anyone. Rubio told Al Jazeera that “the Strait of Hormuz will be open when this operation is over — one way or another,” and rejected Iran’s demand to maintain sovereignty over the waterway as part of any agreement. Al Jazeera That language, while reassuring to oil markets in the abstract, leaves significant space for a breakdown in negotiations — and a resumption of exactly the kind of escalatory cycle that sent the KSE-100 down 15% in the first quarter.
Oil market participants appear to be processing this nuance already. Bond yields have been steadily rising throughout March as investors race to reprice the chances of rate hikes from central banks, with expectations of rate cuts at the Federal Reserve and the Bank of England having fallen sharply and in many cases being replaced by anticipations of hawkish monetary policy. CNBC That global repricing of central bank paths — driven directly by energy-led inflation — is a structural headwind for emerging market assets, Pakistan included, that does not disappear even if a ceasefire is signed.
Global Macro Implications: When the World’s Safe Asset Isn’t Safe Enough
Beneath the headline drama of the oil price spike and the stock market surge, the most consequential development of this crisis may be the one attracting the least retail attention: the systematic erosion of US Treasury demand at precisely the moment that Washington’s finances require it most.
Stephen Jones, Chief Investment Officer at Aegon Asset Management, described central banks’ actions as countries “raising war funds,” saying, “They are drawing on emergency reserves.” This round of selling is not an isolated event but a microcosm of a longer-term structural shift: global reserve management institutions are systematically reducing exposure to dollar assets. All-Weather Media
If the Iran conflict ends quickly, some of this pressure on the Treasury market will ease. Central banks in Turkey, India, and Thailand that have been intervening in FX markets to defend their currencies will face less pressure to continue liquidating reserves once oil prices fall. That normalisation would provide some relief to US bond yields. But the structural share of foreign holdings — already at a 27-year low — is not a tap that turns back on quickly. The trend that the war has accelerated was years in the making.
For Pakistan’s capital markets, the near-term playbook favours the bulls — as long as the diplomatic process holds. A ceasefire, lower Brent crude, a softer dollar, and resumed SBP rate cuts would be a nearly perfect cocktail for further PSX gains. The index, even after Wednesday’s surge, remains roughly 18% below its all-time high of approximately 189,556 points reached in January 2026. There is significant mean-reversion potential if geopolitical risk genuinely abates.
Outlook: Watch April 6 — and the Address to the Nation
The immediate calendar is unusually consequential. President Trump is scheduled to deliver a prime-time address to the nation on Wednesday evening providing what the White House described as “an important update on Iran.” The April 6 deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz — or face strikes on its energy infrastructure — creates a hard binary. Either the diplomatic track delivers a meaningful framework before that date, or markets face the prospect of a sharp escalatory spike.
Secretary of State Rubio, before departing for a G7 foreign ministers meeting in France, confirmed that “there are intermediary countries that are passing messages and progress has been made — some concrete progress has been made,” describing negotiations as “an ongoing and fluid process.” CNN
For investors in Karachi and beyond, the single most important watch item is not the KSE-100 level, nor the US Treasury yield, nor even Brent crude. It is whether Pakistan’s mediation — this extraordinary diplomatic intervention by a country whose consulate in its own largest city was attacked just a month ago — delivers enough of a framework before April 6 to allow both sides to step back from the precipice.
If it does, Wednesday’s 7,500-point surge will look, in hindsight, like the opening chapter of a recovery story rather than a false dawn in a prolonged storm. If it doesn’t, the circuit-breaker that paused trading on Wednesday could, in the weeks ahead, be pointing in the other direction.
Pakistan has been here before — not as a victim of great-power competition, but as its unexpected architect. It was Islamabad that facilitated Nixon’s 1971 opening to China. It may yet be Islamabad that writes the first line of a postwar order in the Persian Gulf. The KSE-100, for one day at least, has decided to believe it.
Discover more from The Economy
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Analysis
US Hotels Slash Summer Room Rates as World Cup Demand Falls Short
A $30 billion economic dream collides with the sobering arithmetic of inflation, geopolitics, and over-optimism.
In the final weeks of March, Ed Grose, the president of the Greater Philadelphia Hotel Association, delivered a piece of news that should have landed as a footnote but instead became a canary in the coal mine. FIFA, the global football governing body, had cancelled approximately 2,000 of its 10,000 reserved hotel rooms in Philadelphia—a 20% haircut with no explanation offered. “While we were not excited about that, it’s not the end of the world either,” Grose told ABC 6, in the kind of measured understatement that hotel executives deploy when they are privately recalibrating their summer budgets.
But Philadelphia was not an isolated data point. It was a signal.
By mid-April, the hospitality industry’s quiet unease had become impossible to ignore. Hotels across US host cities began slashing summer room rates. Match-day prices in Atlanta, Dallas, Miami, Philadelphia and San Francisco dropped roughly one-third from their peaks earlier this year, according to data from Lighthouse Intelligence. In Vancouver, FIFA released approximately 15,000 nightly room bookings—a volume that local hoteliers described as “higher than typically expected”. In Toronto, the cancellations reached 80%.
The message is unmistakable: the much-hyped 2026 FIFA World Cup is not going to deliver the economic bonanza that FIFA, the Trump administration, and countless hotel owners had promised themselves. And the reasons—ticket prices, inflation fears, a Trump-driven slump in international arrivals, and the geopolitical fallout from the Iran war—point to something deeper than a temporary demand shortfall. They point to the structural limits of the mega-event economic model itself.
The numbers tell a story of sharp reversal
Let us begin with the arithmetic, because the arithmetic is unforgiving. In February, CoStar and Tourism Economics projected that the World Cup would lift US hotel revenue per available room (RevPAR) by 1.7% during June and July—already a modest figure, roughly one-quarter of the 6.9% RevPAR lift the United States enjoyed during the 1994 World Cup. By April, even that muted forecast had been downgraded: CoStar now expects RevPAR to rise just 1.2% in June and 1.5% in July.
Isaac Collazo, STR’s senior director of analytics, put it bluntly in February: the overall impact to the United States would be “negligible due to the underlying weakness expected elsewhere”. That underlying weakness has only deepened since. For the full year 2026, the World Cup is now expected to contribute just 0.4 percentage points to US RevPAR growth, down from 0.6%.
The correction in pricing has been swift. Hoteliers who had locked in eye-watering rate increases—some exceeding 300% during match weeks—are now in full retreat. Scott Yesner, founder of Philadelphia-based short-term rental and boutique hotel management company Bespoke Stay, told the Financial Times: “I’m seeing a lot of people start to panic and lower their rates”.
This is not merely a story of greedy hoteliers getting their comeuppance. It is a story of structural miscalculation—one in which every stakeholder, from FIFA to city tourism bureaus to individual property owners, built their projections on a foundation of wishful thinking.
Why the fans aren’t coming
The collapse in demand is overdetermined, which makes it all the more revealing. Four factors are converging, each sufficient on its own to chill international travel, and together they form a perfect storm.
First, ticket prices. A Guardian analysis found that tickets for the 2026 final shot up in price by up to nine times compared with the 2022 edition, adjusted for inflation. For the average European fan—already facing a transatlantic flight, a weak euro, and domestic cost-of-living pressures—the math simply does not work. Many fans are instead choosing to watch from home.
Second, inflation fears. While US inflation has moderated from its 2022 peaks, the memory of double-digit price increases lingers, and hotel rates that briefly soared into four-figure territory for match nights became an instant deterrent.
Third, anti-American sentiment and the “Trump slump.” This factor is the most politically charged and perhaps the most consequential. Travel bookings to the United States for summer 2026 have decreased by up to 14% compared to the previous year, according to Forbes. Cirium data shows Europe-to-US bookings down 14.22% year-over-year, with particularly steep drops from Frankfurt (−36%), Barcelona (−26%), and Amsterdam (−23%). Lior Sekler, chief commercial officer at HRI Hospitality, blamed dissatisfaction with the Trump administration’s visa and immigration policies, as well as the instability triggered by the war in Iran, for cooling international demand. “Obviously, people’s desire to come to the United States right now is down,” he told the Financial Times.
Fourth, safety concerns. Recent shootings—including one in Minneapolis—have heightened anxiety among European fans considering a trip to the 2026 World Cup. Travel advisories issued by European governments urging caution when visiting the United States have not helped.
The cumulative effect is stark. Where FIFA had advised host cities to expect a 50/50 split between domestic and international visitors, the actual international share appears to be falling well short. Tourism Economics now expects international visitor numbers to the US to rise just 3.4%—a figure that, in a normal year, might be respectable, but against the backdrop of World Cup expectations feels like a failure.
The mega-event economic model under pressure
For anyone who has studied the economics of mega-events—the Olympics, the World Cup, the Super Bowl—the current hotel demand shortfall is not an anomaly. It is a predictable outcome of a broken forecasting model.
The core problem is simple: the organisations that run these events have every incentive to over-promise. FIFA’s 2025 analysis projected that the 2026 World Cup would drive $30.5 billion in economic output and create 185,000 jobs in the United States. Those figures were predicated on the assumption that international tourists would flock to the tournament. But as the Forbes analysis from early March made clear, that assumption was always fragile.
The gap between FIFA’s rhetoric and operational reality has become impossible to ignore. In Boston, Meet Boston—the city’s tourism bureau—acknowledged that “original estimates from 2–3 years ago were inflated” and that the reduction in FIFA’s room blocks had been anticipated for months. That is a polite way of saying: everyone knew the numbers were too high, but no one wanted to say so publicly until the cancellations forced the issue.
Jan Freitag, CoStar’s national director of hospitality analytics, described the release of rooms—known in the industry as “the wash”—as “just a little bit more than people had anticipated”. The key word there is “little.” The surprise was not that FIFA overbooked; it is that the organisation overbooked to this extent.
Perhaps the most telling data point comes from hoteliers themselves. Harry Carr, senior vice president of commercial optimisation at Pivot Hotels & Resorts, told CoStar that FIFA had returned some of the room blocks held by his company “without a single reservation having been made”. At HRI Lodging in the Bay Area, Fifa reserved blocks had seen only 15% of rooms actually taken up. When the organiser itself cannot fill its own blocks, the industry has a problem.
A tale of two World Cups: 1994 vs 2026
The contrast with 1994 is instructive. When the United States last hosted the World Cup, RevPAR for June and July rose 6.9%, driven largely by a 5% increase in average daily rate. That was a genuine boom. The 2026 forecast, by contrast, projects a lift that is “almost entirely on a 1.6% lift in ADR”—a much more fragile and rate-dependent gain.
What changed? In 1994, the United States was riding a post-Cold War wave of global goodwill. International travel was expanding rapidly, the dollar was relatively weak, and the geopolitical landscape was stable. In 2026, the United States is perceived by many foreign travellers as hostile, expensive, and unsafe. The difference in sentiment is not marginal; it is existential.
Vijay Dandapani, president of the Hotel Association of New York City, captured the mood with characteristic bluntness. He told the Financial Times he could “categorically say we haven’t seen much of a meaningful boost yet… It’s possible we will get some more demand, but at this point it certainly will not be the cornucopia that FIFA was promising”.
What this means for hoteliers and policymakers
For hotel owners, the lesson is uncomfortable but clear: betting on mega-events is a high-risk strategy. The properties that will survive this summer’s disappointment are those that built their business models on a diversified base of corporate, leisure, and group demand—not those that staked everything on World Cup premiums.
For US tourism policymakers, the message is even more sobering. The World Cup was supposed to be a showcase—a chance to remind the world that the United States remains an open, welcoming destination. Instead, the tournament is revealing the opposite. The combination of restrictive visa policies, a belligerent trade posture, and a perception of social instability is actively repelling the very visitors the industry needs.
Aran Ryan, director of industry studies at Tourism Economics, told the Financial Times that his firm still expects an “incremental boost… but there’s concern about ticket prices, there’s concern about border crossings, and there’s concern about anti-U.S. sentiment—and that’s been made worse by the Iran war”. That is a remarkable admission: even with the world’s largest sporting event on its soil, the United States cannot reverse its inbound tourism decline.
The one bright spot (and why it’s not enough)
To be fair, not all the data is uniformly negative. A RateGain analysis released on April 15, using Sojern’s travel intent data, found double-digit year-over-year flight booking growth into several US host cities: Dallas (+42%), Houston (+38%), Boston (+17%), Philadelphia (+16%), and Miami (+15%). The United Kingdom is the leading international source market for flights into US host cities, accounting for 19.5% of international bookings.
But these figures require careful interpretation. First, they represent bookings made after the rate cuts—that is, demand that is being stimulated by lower prices, not organic enthusiasm. Second, even with these increases, the absolute volume of international travel remains below pre-pandemic trend lines. Third, the airline data is not uniformly positive: Seattle is down 16% year-over-year, and transatlantic bookings from key European hubs remain deeply depressed.
The most worrying signal in the RateGain data is the search-to-booking gap from Argentina—the defending World Cup champions. Argentina accounts for just 1.3% of confirmed flight bookings but 8.2% of flight searches, “pointing to substantial latent demand” that is not converting into actual travel. That gap represents fans who want to come but are ultimately deciding not to. The reasons are the same as everywhere: cost, fear, and the perception that the United States does not want them.
Conclusion: A reckoning, not a disaster
Let me be clear: the World Cup will not be a disaster for US hotels. CoStar still expects positive RevPAR growth in June and July. Millions of tickets have been sold. The tournament will generate real economic activity.
But the gap between expectation and reality is vast. Hotels are slashing rates. FIFA is quietly cancelling room blocks. International fans are staying home. And the structural lessons—about the limits of event-driven economics, about the fragility of tourism demand in a hostile political environment, about the dangers of believing one’s own hype—are ones that policymakers and industry executives would do well to absorb before the next mega-event comes calling.
The 2026 World Cup was supposed to be the summer the United States welcomed the world. Instead, it may be remembered as the summer the world decided the price of admission was simply too high.
FAQ
Q: Why are US hotels slashing World Cup room rates?
A: Hotels in host cities including Atlanta, Dallas, Miami, Philadelphia and San Francisco have cut match-day rates by roughly one-third due to weaker-than-expected demand, driven by high ticket prices, inflation fears, anti-American sentiment, and FIFA’s own cancellation of thousands of room blocks.
Q: How much are hotel rates dropping for the 2026 World Cup?
A: According to Lighthouse Intelligence data, match-day room rates have fallen about 33% from their peaks earlier this year.
Q: What is the expected RevPAR impact of the 2026 World Cup?
A: CoStar forecasts a 1.2% RevPAR increase in June and 1.5% in July—down from 1.7% projected in February.
Q: Did FIFA cancel hotel room reservations?
A: Yes. FIFA cancelled approximately 2,000 of 10,000 reserved rooms in Philadelphia, 80% of reservations in Toronto and Vancouver, and 800 of 2,000 rooms in Mexico City.
Q: What is causing weak World Cup hotel demand?
A: Four main factors: high ticket prices, inflation concerns, anti-American sentiment and the “Trump slump,” and safety fears following recent shootings.
Discover more from The Economy
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Analysis
US Banks Make Record Buybacks on Trump’s Looser Rules and Choppy Markets
There is a peculiar kind of irony in Wall Street’s first quarter of 2026. American equity markets endured their worst opening three months since the mini-banking crisis of 2023—rattled by a shooting war with Iran, an oil price spike that briefly pushed Brent crude past $120 a barrel, and a Federal Reserve that refused to blink. Yet inside the fortress balance sheets of America’s six largest lenders, a very different story was unfolding: a record-shattering cascade of cash flowing back to shareholders.
When the earnings releases landed this week, the numbers were extraordinary. JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan Stanley together spent approximately $32 billion on share repurchases in a single quarter—a figure that comfortably eclipsed analyst consensus expectations and, more importantly, signals that the Trump administration’s quiet dismantling of post-crisis capital rules is already reshaping the financial landscape in ways both celebrated and quietly alarming.
The record is not accidental. It is the logical, almost inevitable, consequence of a regulatory pivot that accelerated on March 19, 2026, when the Federal Reserve officially re-proposed a dramatically softened version of the Basel III Endgame framework—a moment that Wall Street lobbyists had spent three years and tens of millions of dollars engineering.
A Brief History of the Capital Arms Race
To understand why $32 billion in a single quarter is so remarkable, you need to remember what banks were doing with that money until very recently: hoarding it. The original 2023 Basel III Endgame proposal, drafted under Biden-era regulators, would have forced the eight largest US lenders to increase their common equity tier 1 (CET1) capital ratios by as much as 19%. The logic was defensible—the 2008 financial crisis exposed catastrophic capital inadequacy, and regulators globally wanted thicker shock absorbers. Banks pushed back furiously, running advertisements warning of reduced mortgage lending and constrained small-business credit. Quietly, they also began accumulating capital buffers in anticipation of stricter rules.
By the time Donald Trump won a second term and installed Michelle Bowman as Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision—replacing the architect of the original proposal, Michael Barr—the largest US banks were sitting on an estimated $650 to $750 billion in projected cumulative excess capital over Trump’s presidency, according to Oliver Wyman analysis. That capital had to go somewhere. The March 2026 re-proposal gave it somewhere to go.
The new framework, per Conference Board analysis of the regulatory proposals, would reduce overall capital requirements at the largest banks by nearly 6%—a near-perfect inversion of what Biden regulators had sought. Critically, the GSIB surcharge, the extra capital buffer levied on globally systemically important banks, was also re-proposed for recalibration. JPMorgan CFO Jeremy Barnum captured the mood on this week’s earnings call, noting the bank currently measures some $40 billion in excess capital relative to today’s required levels—even before any final easing of the rules.
The $32 Billion Surge: Who Spent What
The precision of the data, pulled directly from SEC 8-K filings released this week, is striking. Here is where the capital went:
| Bank | Q1 2026 Buybacks | Total Capital Returned to Shareholders |
|---|---|---|
| JPMorgan Chase | $8.1 billion | ~$12.2bn (incl. $4.1bn dividends) |
| Bank of America | $7.2 billion | ~$9.3bn (incl. $2.0bn dividends) |
| Citigroup | $6.3 billion | ~$7.4bn (incl. ~$1.1bn dividends) |
| Goldman Sachs | $5.0 billion | ~$6.4bn (incl. $1.38bn dividends) |
| Wells Fargo | $4.0 billion | ~$5.4bn (incl. ~$1.4bn dividends) |
| Morgan Stanley | $1.75 billion | ~$2.5bn (incl. dividends) |
| Combined | ~$32.35 billion | ~$43bn |
Sources: JPMorgan 8-K, Bank of America 8-K, Citigroup 8-K, Goldman Sachs 8-K, Wells Fargo 8-K, Morgan Stanley 8-K
For context, the Big Six averaged roughly $14 billion per quarter in buybacks across 2021–2024, before accelerating to $21 billion in Q2 2025, according to J.P. Morgan Private Bank research. The Q1 2026 figure is more than double that historical average. Citigroup’s $6.3 billion was, as CEO Jane Fraser noted on the earnings call, the highest quarterly buyback in the bank’s history—a milestone at an institution that was technically insolvent in 2008 and reliant on a $45 billion government bailout.
The Regulatory Machinery: Basel III’s “Mulligan”
What regulatory observers are calling the “Basel III Mulligan” deserves careful unpacking for non-specialist readers. In simple terms: for three years, large US banks were required to hold more capital than rules formally demanded—essentially self-imposing buffers to prepare for what everyone assumed would be much stricter requirements. Those requirements never arrived in their original form. The March 2026 re-proposal, issued simultaneously by the Fed, FDIC, and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, replaced the proposed 19% capital increase with a framework that, in many cases, delivers net capital relief rather than additional requirements, according to Financial Content analysis of the new rules.
The result is structurally elegant from a shareholder’s perspective: banks spent years building fortress balance sheets for a regulatory winter that has now been declared a false alarm. That excess capital—tens of billions of dollars per institution—represents a dammed river suddenly unblocked. The public comment period for the new proposals runs through June 18, 2026, meaning final rules remain months away. But banks are not waiting. The market signal from regulators is unambiguous, and buyback programs respond to signals, not final texts.
Bloomberg’s analysis had anticipated precisely this moment, noting that Trump-era regulators were moving toward a “capital-neutral” Basel III outcome that would unlock shareholder distributions at a scale not seen since before the financial crisis. What was predicted has duly arrived.
Chaos as Catalyst: How Market Volatility Amplified the Story
Here is where the narrative turns counterintuitive—and, for a certain class of investor, deeply satisfying. Conventional wisdom holds that banks struggle in choppy markets. In reality, the definition of “struggle” depends entirely on which side of the bank’s business you are examining.
The Nasdaq KBW Bank Index endured its worst first-quarter performance since the 2023 mini-banking crisis, dragged lower by fears about private credit contagion, the US-Iran conflict that erupted on February 28, and the so-called “March Oil Shock” that briefly paralyzed capital markets activity. Lending-sensitive banks faced NII compression worries. Credit quality concerns loomed.
And yet Goldman Sachs posted record equities trading revenue in Q1 2026. Goldman CEO David Solomon acknowledged rising volatility “amid the broader uncertainty” of the period, while noting that the bank’s results confirmed “very strong performance for our shareholders this quarter.” Citigroup’s markets and services divisions delivered double-digit growth precisely because volatility generates transaction volume—every hedge fund repositioning, every corporate treasury scrambling to cover commodity exposure, every sovereign wealth manager rebalancing away from dollar assets represents a fee opportunity for a well-capitalised trading desk.
The paradox is structural: volatile markets that suppress bank stock prices also generate the trading revenues that finance the buybacks that prop up those same stock prices. It is capitalism’s own form of recursion.
The Risks That Risk Managers Are Quietly Managing
Premium financial journalism demands more than celebration, and there are real risks embedded in this capital bonanza that deserve scrutiny.
Moral hazard and the memory hole. The explicit purpose of higher post-crisis capital requirements was to ensure that taxpayers would never again be asked to rescue financial institutions that had been permitted to lever up their balance sheets in pursuit of short-term shareholder returns. Reducing those requirements—even modestly—reverses that logic. As the Atlantic Council has noted in its analysis of global regulatory fragmentation, the Trump administration’s deregulatory stance is already prompting delays and dilutions elsewhere: the UK Prudential Regulation Authority has pushed implementation to January 2027, and the EU is debating further postponements. When every major jurisdiction softens simultaneously, the global backstop weakens simultaneously.
The buyback signal as inequality amplifier. Share repurchases concentrate wealth among existing shareholders—disproportionately institutional investors and high-net-worth individuals. A $32 billion quarterly return program at the six largest banks is, in distributional terms, largely a transfer to the top quintile of the wealth spectrum. That the same quarter saw Bank of America’s consumer banking division report loan charge-offs of $1.4 billion underscores the bifurcation: capital is being efficiently returned to shareholders while credit stress among retail borrowers persists.
Geopolitical tail risk remains unpriced. Jamie Dimon’s shareholder letter this spring referenced “stagflation” risks explicitly. The KBW Bank Index’s Q1 underperformance was a rational market signal that investors see non-trivial probability of scenarios—broader Middle East escalation, sustained elevated oil prices, a Federal Reserve forced to choose between inflation and growth—where these fortified balance sheets are tested in ways that would make the current buyback pace look imprudent in retrospect.
The Global Dimension: Europe, Asia, and the Regulatory Arbitrage Question
The implications extend well beyond American shores. European banks, which operate under stricter ongoing capital frameworks and face their own Basel III implementation challenges, are watching the US deregulatory sprint with a mixture of envy and alarm. EU lenders’ aggregate CET1 ratio sits at approximately 15.73%—comfortable on paper, but increasingly constrained relative to US peers now liberated to return capital more aggressively. European banks are lobbying Brussels for comparable relief, creating competitive pressure that risks a race to the bottom on global capital standards.
Asian regulators, particularly in Japan and Australia, have been broadly more faithful to Basel III implementation timelines. This creates a genuine regulatory arbitrage dynamic: US banks, freed from the capital drag of the original Endgame framework, can price risk more aggressively and pursue returns that more conservatively capitalised international peers cannot match. In the medium term, this may advantage Wall Street in global capital markets mandates—but it also means the US financial system absorbs more of the global tail risk.
What This Means for Investors in 2026 and Beyond
For retail and institutional investors parsing these numbers, a few practical observations:
The buyback surge mechanically reduces share counts, improving earnings per share metrics. Bank of America’s common shares outstanding fell 6% year-over-year; Citigroup’s EPS of $3.06 was materially aided by a smaller denominator. This is genuine value creation for patient long-term holders who have endured years of regulatory uncertainty weighing on bank valuations.
The deregulatory tailwind, however, is not infinite. JPMorgan’s Barnum was notably measured on the Q1 earnings call: “We prefer to deploy the capital serving clients,” he noted, flagging that buybacks at current market prices represent a second-best use of the bank’s firepower relative to organic growth or strategic acquisitions. Morgan Stanley’s relatively modest $1.75 billion repurchase—against peers spending multiples more—suggests not every institution is deploying excess capital at the same pace or conviction.
The next inflection points to watch: the Federal Reserve’s June 2026 stress test results, which will set new Stress Capital Buffers for each institution; the final form of the Basel III and GSIB surcharge rules expected by Q4 2026; and Citigroup’s Investor Day in May, where CFO Gonzalo Luchetti has signaled fresh guidance on the pace of repurchases following the nearly completed $20 billion program.
The Question That Lingers
There is a version of this story that reads simply as good news: well-capitalised banks returning excess capital to shareholders, generating trading revenues from market volatility, and demonstrating the resilience of a financial system that—unlike 2008—does not require emergency intervention. JPMorgan’s CET1 ratio sits at 15.4%. Bank of America’s at 11.2%. Even after the buyback blitz, these are not reckless institutions.
But there is another version of the story, less comfortable and ultimately more important. The capital that US banks are returning to shareholders this quarter was accumulated partly because regulators told them they needed it as a buffer against catastrophic, low-probability events. The decision to declare that buffer unnecessary was made not by markets, not by stress models, but by a political administration with a stated ideological commitment to deregulation. The question is not whether the system is resilient today. It is whether the memory of why the buffers existed in the first place will survive long enough to matter when it next becomes relevant.
Wall Street has a notoriously short institutional memory. History, unfortunately, does not.
Sources & Further Reading:
- Federal Reserve Basel III Endgame Re-Proposal, March 19, 2026
- JPMorgan Chase Q1 2026 Earnings Release (SEC 8-K)
- Bank of America Q1 2026 Earnings Release (SEC 8-K)
- Citigroup Q1 2026 Earnings Release (SEC 8-K)
- Goldman Sachs Q1 2026 Earnings Release (SEC 8-K)
- Wells Fargo Q1 2026 Earnings Release (SEC 8-K)
- Morgan Stanley Q1 2026 Earnings Release (SEC 8-K)
- Oliver Wyman: How Trump 2.0 Will Impact US Financial Regulation
- Atlantic Council: Basel III Endgame and Global Regulatory Fragmentation
- Bloomberg Intelligence: Capital-Neutral Basel III Endgame in 2026
- Conference Board: Revised Bank Capital Requirements
- J.P. Morgan Private Bank: Bank Deregulation and Capital Returns
Discover more from The Economy
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
Analysis
Singapore’s Construction & Defence Supercycle: The $100B Case
The Quiet Outperformer in a Noisy World
While markets gyrate on every Federal Reserve whisper and geopolitical tremor from Taipei to Tehran, a quieter, more durable story has been compounding beneath the surface of Southeast Asian finance. Singapore’s Straits Times Index has demonstrated a resilience that confounds the casual observer—not because Singapore has somehow insulated itself from global volatility, but because its domestic capex cycle is so deep, so structural, and so government-anchored that it functions almost like a sovereign bond with equity-like upside.
The thesis is not complicated, but its implications are profound: Singapore is simultaneously running two of the most compelling domestic investment supercycles in Asia. The first is a construction and infrastructure boom of historic proportions, projected to sustain demand of between S$47 billion and S$53 billion in 2026 alone, according to the Building and Construction Authority. The second is a defence upcycle driven not by ideology but by cold strategic arithmetic—Singapore’s FY2026 defence budget has risen 6.4% to S$24.9 billion, the largest single allocation in the city-state’s history. Together, these twin engines are forging what may be the most underappreciated domestic growth story in global markets today.
For the sophisticated investor, the question is not whether to pay attention. It is how quickly to act.
The Architecture of a S$100 Billion Construction Boom
To understand why Singapore’s construction sector 2026 outlook is so structurally compelling, you must first appreciate the government’s almost Victorian confidence in long-range planning. Unlike the speculative infrastructure cycles that have periodically ravaged emerging markets from Jakarta to Ankara, Singapore’s construction pipeline is anchored by sovereign balance sheet commitments that span decades.
The headline project is, of course, Changi Airport Terminal 5—a S$15 billion-plus undertaking that, when complete, will make Changi one of the largest airport complexes on the planet, capable of handling an additional 50 million passengers annually. Construction mobilisation is accelerating, with land reclamation and enabling works already underway at Changi East. The ripple effects on contractors, materials suppliers, and specialist engineers are only beginning to register in earnings.
Alongside Changi, the Cross Island Line Phase 2—linking Turf City to Bright Hill and eventually to the eastern corridor—adds another multi-billion-dollar spine to an already formidable rail network. The Land Transport Authority has positioned this as foundational infrastructure for Singapore’s next-generation urban mobility. Construction timelines extend through the early 2030s, providing a long runway for sector earnings visibility.
Then there is the HDB public housing programme—perhaps the least glamorous but most structurally certain component of the boom. Singapore’s Housing and Development Board has committed to building 100,000 new flats between 2021 and 2025, with demand for subsequent tranches remaining elevated as the city’s population and household formation dynamics continue to evolve. These are not speculative builds awaiting buyers. These are politically mandated, fully financed housing units for which demand is structurally guaranteed.
The cumulative effect? Approximately S$100 billion in construction demand projected through 2030 and beyond, according to sector analysts—a figure that represents not a single boom-bust cycle but a sustained, multi-phase expansion with government backstop at every stage.
What the Analysts Are Saying—and Why It Matters
The analyst community has been unusually aligned on this theme. Thilan Wickramasinghe of Maybank Securities has argued forcefully that Singapore’s construction sector is enjoying a “structural demand floor” that is unlikely to recede before 2029 at the earliest. This is not standard sell-side optimism. It is a data-driven observation grounded in the project pipeline’s physical characteristics: these are not ribbon-cuttings awaiting funding approval. They are cranes in the ground, contracts signed, and milestone payments flowing.
Shekhar Jaiswal of RHB has echoed similar conviction, pointing to the tight interplay between public-sector infrastructure commitments and private-sector demand—particularly from the data centre construction wave now rolling across Singapore’s industrial landmass. Hyperscaler demand for purpose-built facilities from the likes of Google, Microsoft, and ByteDance subsidiaries has added an entirely new stratum of construction activity to an already saturated order book.
OCBC and UOB Kay Hian analysts have focused their attention on specific SGX-listed beneficiaries: Seatrium (offshore and marine engineering), Wee Hur Holdings (construction and workers’ accommodation), Tiong Seng Holdings, and the larger integrated players like Sembcorp Industries, whose energy infrastructure pivot dovetails neatly with the broader construction narrative. The common thread is margin recovery—after years of pandemic-era cost disruption, Singapore’s leading contractors are now embedded in projects with cost-escalation clauses and more sophisticated risk-sharing frameworks, which means that even if materials costs rise, earnings visibility is meaningfully improved.
The Defence Upcycle: Not a Trend, a Structural Shift
If the construction boom is the known unknown of Singapore’s equity story, the defence sector is the unknown unknown—underappreciated, underanalysed, and consequentially under-owned.
Singapore’s FY2026 defence budget of S$24.9 billion—up 6.4% year-on-year—needs to be contextualised properly. This is not a government responding to domestic political pressure or an election cycle. Singapore has no serious opposition defence constituency to satisfy. This is a city-state of 5.9 million people, sitting at the confluence of the South China Sea, the Malacca Strait, and the Indian Ocean, that has made a sober-eyed strategic calculation that the post-Cold War peace dividend is over.
The geopolitical calculus is not subtle. US-China strategic competition has moved from trade tariffs to semiconductor export controls to naval posturing in the Taiwan Strait, with no credible de-escalation pathway in view. The Middle East conflict, far from remaining regionally contained, has introduced new fragility into global shipping lanes, energy supply chains, and rare materials pricing—all of which matter acutely to Singapore’s import-dependent economy. And the South China Sea, where Singapore maintains scrupulous diplomatic neutrality while quietly acknowledging the risks, remains a theatre of escalating jurisdictional assertion.
Against this backdrop, Singapore’s defence spending is not an anomaly. It is part of a broader Asia-Pacific rearmament that includes Australia’s AUKUS submarine programme, Japan’s historic doubling of its defence budget to 2% of GDP, and South Korea’s accelerated weapons modernisation. The difference is that Singapore, as a city-state, cannot afford strategic ambiguity. Every dollar of defence spending is a genuine operational commitment.
For investors, the opportunity lies in the domestic supply chain. ST Engineering—Singapore’s defence and engineering conglomerate—remains the most direct beneficiary, with its defence systems, aerospace, and smart city divisions all feeding into either the domestic programme or allied nation contracts. ST Engineering’s order book has expanded materially, and its defence electronics segment is particularly positioned for multi-year contract extensions as the Singapore Armed Forces modernise their digital battlefield capabilities.
Beyond ST Engineering, the defence ecosystem extends into Sembcorp Marine (now Seatrium) for naval vessel sustainment, specialised SMEs in precision engineering and electronics, and the broader aerospace MRO cluster at Seletar and Changi that services both military and commercial aviation demand.
Singapore as Asia’s Geopolitical Hedge: The “Switzerland of Asia” Premium
There is a deeper, more structural argument that sophisticated international investors have begun to price—though not yet fully. Singapore’s unique positioning as Asia’s neutral financial hub, legal jurisdiction, and logistics nerve centre means that its domestic capex cycle functions as a partial hedge against the very geopolitical risks that threaten broader Asian exposure.
When US-China tensions spike, capital does not simply evaporate. It relocates—and Singapore is the most natural beneficiary in Southeast Asia. Family offices, private equity vehicles, and corporate treasury functions have been migrating to Singapore at an accelerating pace, bringing with them demand for premium office space, data infrastructure, financial services, and—critically—the physical construction that houses all of it.
This creates a feedback loop that is underappreciated in most macro models: geopolitical tension, rather than being a pure negative for Singapore, actually reinforces the investment case by accelerating the city-state’s role as a regional sanctuary. BlackRock’s 2024 Asia Outlook and similar institutional frameworks have acknowledged this dynamic, even if mainstream commentary has been slow to internalise it.
The BCA construction demand forecast of S$47–53 billion for 2026 needs to be read through this lens. This is not just an infrastructure pipeline number. It is a measure of Singapore’s strategic confidence in its own future as the undisputed hub of a fractured Asia.
The Risk Register: What Could Go Wrong
A platinum-standard analysis demands honest accounting of the downside. Three risks deserve genuine investor attention.
First, cost and labour pressures. Singapore’s construction industry remains heavily dependent on foreign labour, and any tightening of the foreign worker levy regime or supply-side disruption—whether from regional competition for migrant labour or policy shifts in source countries—could compress contractor margins. The more sophisticated players have hedged through escalation clauses and project phasing, but smaller subcontractors remain exposed.
Second, prolonged Middle East conflict and materials pricing. Steel, cement, and specialised construction inputs remain vulnerable to supply-chain disruption originating far from Singapore. A broadening of the Middle East conflict that affects Suez Canal traffic or Gulf petrochemical output could translate into meaningful materials cost inflation. Analysts at DBS have flagged this as a key variable in their sector models for 2026.
Third, the REIT overhang. Singapore’s once-celebrated S-REIT sector remains under pressure from an extended higher-rate environment. While the construction boom benefits developers and contractors, the REIT vehicles that typically hold completed assets face a more challenging refinancing environment and yield compression dynamic. Investors should distinguish sharply between the construction/engineering beneficiaries—where the opportunity is structural and near-term—and the REIT space, where patience and selectivity remain the watchwords. Mixed views from analysts across OCBC, UOB Kay Hian, and Maybank reflect this nuance.
Actionable Investor Takeaways
For the sophisticated investor seeking to position for this supercycle, the following framework applies:
- Overweight Singapore construction and engineering equities with direct exposure to the Changi T5, Cross Island Line, and HDB pipeline—specifically contractors with government-dominated order books and embedded escalation protections.
- ST Engineering remains the single most compelling defence play on the SGX, combining domestic budget tailwinds with a growing international defence electronics export business. Its diversification across defence, aerospace, and smart infrastructure makes it uniquely resilient.
- Data centre construction plays deserve attention as a secular growth overlay—the hyperscaler buildout in Singapore is additive to, not substitutive for, the public infrastructure cycle.
- Be selective on S-REITs. Industrial and logistics REITs with long-lease, institutional-grade tenants are better positioned than retail or office-heavy vehicles in the current rate environment.
- Monitor the BCA’s mid-year construction demand update (typically released mid-2026) as a key catalyst for sentiment re-rating in the sector.
The Fortress That Keeps Building
There is a phrase that circulates quietly among Singapore’s policymakers: “We build, therefore we are.” It captures something essential about a city-state that has never had the luxury of assuming its own survival—and has converted that existential urgency into one of the most disciplined, forward-planned construction and defence investment programmes in the world.
In a global environment defined by fragmentation, supply-chain anxiety, and strategic hedging, Singapore’s domestic capex story is not merely a local equity theme. It is a window into how a small, brilliant state is building its way into relevance for the next quarter-century—crane by crane, frigate by frigate, terminal by terminal.
The investors who recognise this earliest will own the supercycle. The rest will read about it when it is already priced.
Discover more from The Economy
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
-
Markets & Finance3 months agoTop 15 Stocks for Investment in 2026 in PSX: Your Complete Guide to Pakistan’s Best Investment Opportunities
-
Analysis2 months agoBrazil’s Rare Earth Race: US, EU, and China Compete for Critical Minerals as Tensions Rise
-
Analysis2 months agoTop 10 Stocks for Investment in PSX for Quick Returns in 2026
-
Banks3 months agoBest Investments in Pakistan 2026: Top 10 Low-Price Shares and Long-Term Picks for the PSX
-
Investment3 months agoTop 10 Mutual Fund Managers in Pakistan for Investment in 2026: A Comprehensive Guide for Optimal Returns
-
Global Economy4 months agoPakistan’s Export Goldmine: 10 Game-Changing Markets Where Pakistani Businesses Are Winning Big in 2025
-
Asia3 months agoChina’s 50% Domestic Equipment Rule: The Semiconductor Mandate Reshaping Global Tech
-
Global Economy4 months ago15 Most Lucrative Sectors for Investment in Pakistan: A 2025 Data-Driven Analysis
